""0 10 - ...,., Ia c::aO ' / \ . --:=- . .. --- --- \, _ J \\\\ Il .:::: \ I \ \ ---- \ ---, . \ .(" þ..# ,.. -4'. ot1It' , \'ì People who care about the martini have given it a first name. A · EEFEATEI( Ii , . \ @ First name for the martini r: I - - ( ; ' \j 1, \ !\' <, J FROM ENGLAND BY KOBRAND NY · 94 PROOF. TRIPLE DISTILLED. 100% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS AVCiUST 2,0, 19 b b old enelny would soon dominate the j\egean with this immensely powerful vessel. Steps had all eady been taken to meet the threat. \Vithin days after work on the Reshadieh W.:1S tLlken up ag('lin, the Greek Minister of Marine told the Chalnber of Deputies.. amid cheers, that the Navy would require two battle cruisers. One of these was soon laid down in Germanv and given the name Salamis. But she would take th ree years to build, and the Reshadieh Inight well ha ve overcome the Greek Nav) before she arrived, so the Ministry of Marine went shopping for dread- noughts. BL17il, not quite at the end of its eConoln1c tether, refused to yield either the Minas Geraes or the São Paulo. The Japanese, in the throes of a race with America, could offer nothing, and nei- ther could the French or the Italians, while the British and the Gfrmans were now more th.:l11 ever preoccupied with their ratio of deterrents. But the arrival of two needy and a11Àious shopp<:.rs in th<:. bullish batdeship market was well noted b) Brazil. There had never been ('1 more fa vorable moment for disposing of the world's biggest battleship. Armstrong's was told to proceed with the sale. fhe negotiat]ons were long and tortuous. F'roll1 the b<:.ginning, only two govern- ll1ents, the Greek and the Turkish, were seriously bidding for the H..io de Janeiro, although Armstrong\ l<:.t it be known that this was to he ('1 world auction, and at one point Italv eÀ- pressed keen in terest. It was not that the great powers did not want 1110re b('lttleships-and big ones, at that. Brit- ish, German, and Japanese yards, in particular, were working to capacit). F'rance, Russia, Italy, Austria-Hungar}, and Spain, among the other Euro- pean nations, were building or buying dreadnoughts. Yet none except Ital} expressed intere"t in the Rio de Janeiro. jior one thing, the purchase price would be in the vicinit) of fourteen million dollars (or nearl) forty-five millIon of today's dollars). And other factors were probably still more important. The battle fleets of the great naval powers were being built by squadrons, to a careful plan of homogeneity, and the Rio de Janeiro could not be matched with an) thing afloat. So great, and so highh publicized, were the big battle- ship's dimensions that b) 1913 she was statistically suspect. The sheer number of her batteries, the sheer size of her magazines told agaInst her in the eyes of anyone who was not in r,-x:trenÚs, as the Greeks and Turks were. It was whispered that the Br.:l- zilians had delnanded such lUÀurious living dccolnlnodations that her inter- To make the scene from swivel chair to swizzle stick. . . Susan Thonlas's two-piece wool basket weave in luscious trios ... . #t ' ,,,.. tæ- . '1. ... . MtMieL' ., NEW ORLEANS NASHVI LLE BATON ROUGE JACKSON BEAUMONT of color: ta u pel beige with tu rquoise trinl, spruce green/daffodil with orange trim. 8 to 16, 36.00 Mail orders to Gus Mayer, 800 Canal Street, New Orleans, La. \ ) / \..' .: '- $ ! .::- -r-"^^' !\ rÇ \ \ if ' I ' 'l\ ...--_ 1 . ! >- , pw -- " .-..4 J; - t . -, I · r l { , "--... Vi: 't;; ,=4 i :, ,/ ,\ " , * , " ; ':" *"'" ....",,: . \, "t' SELMAN'S, Louisville LEVY S, Memphis BERKELEYS, Fresno AL ROSENTHAL'S, Okla, City